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The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

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3.1 Questions About Linear Motion. The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time. B) velocity and time. C) distance and time. D) distance and acceleration. E) velocity and distance. 3.1 Questions About Linear Motion. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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1)The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time. B) velocity and time. C) distance and time. D) distance and acceleration. E) velocity and distance. Questions About Linear Motion
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Page 1: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

1) The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are

A) acceleration and time.B) velocity and time.C) distance and time.D) distance and acceleration.E) velocity and distance.

3.1 Questions About Linear Motion

Page 2: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

2) A horse gallops a distance of 10 kilometers in a time of 30 minutes. Its average speed is

A) 15 km/h.B) 20 km/h.C) 30 km/h.D) 40 km/h.

3.1 Questions About Linear Motion

Page 3: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

3) A car maintains a constant velocity of 100 km/hr for 10 seconds. During this interval its acceleration is

A) zero.B) 10 km/hr.C) 110 km/hr.D) 1000 km/hr.

3.1 Questions About Linear Motion

Page 4: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

4) While an object near the Earth's surface is in free fall, its

A) velocity increases.B) acceleration increases.C) mass increases.D) mass decreases.

3.1 Questions About Linear Motion

Page 5: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

5) A hockey puck is set in motion across a frozen pond. If ice friction and air resistance are neglected, the force required to keep the puck sliding at constant velocity is

A) zero.B) equal to its weight.C) equal to its weight divided by its mass.D) equal to the product of its mass times its weight.

3.1 Questions About Linear Motion

Page 6: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

6) An object at rest near the surface of a distant planet starts to fall freely. If the acceleration there is twice that of the Earth, its speed one second later would be

A) 10 m/s.B) 20 m/s.C) 30 m/s.D) 40 m/s.

3.1 Questions About Linear Motion

Page 7: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

7) If an object falling freely were somehow equipped with an odometer to measure the distance it travels, then the amount of distance it travels each succeeding second would be

A) constant.B) less and less each second.C) greater than the second before.D) doubled.

3.1 Questions About Linear Motion

Page 8: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

8) If a freely falling object were somehow equipped with a speedometer, its speed reading would increase each second by about

A) 5 m/s.B) 10 m/s.C) 15 m/s.D) a variable amount.E) depends on its initial speed

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 9: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

9) If a freely falling object were somehow equipped with a speedometer on a planet where the acceleration due to gravity is 20 m/s/s, then its speed reading would increase each second by

A) 10 m/s.B) 20 m/s.C) 30 m/s.D) 40 m/s.E) depends on its initial speed

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 10: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

10) Twelve seconds after starting from rest, an object falling freely will have a speed of

A) 10 m/s.B) 50 m/s.C) 100 m/s.D) more than 100 m/s.

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 11: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

11) If an object moves with constant acceleration, its velocity must

A) be constant also.B) change by the same amount each second.C) change by varying amounts depending on its speed.D) always decrease.

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 12: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

12) If a car increases its velocity from zero to 60 km/h in 10 seconds, its acceleration is

A) 3 km/h/s.B) 6 km/h/s.C) 10 km/h/s.D) 60 km/h/s.E) 600 km/h/s.

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 13: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

13) If a rocket initially at rest accelerates at a rate of 50 m/s2 for one minute, its speed will be

A) 50 m/s.B) 500 m/s.C) 3000 m/s.D) 3600 m/s.Answer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 14: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

14) An apple falls from a tree and hits the ground 5 meters below. It hits the ground with a speed of about

A) 5 m/s.B) 10 m/s.C) 15 m/s.D) 20 m/s.E) not enough information given to estimateAnswer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 15: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

15) It takes 6 seconds for a stone to fall to the bottom of a mine shaft. How deep is the shaft?

A) about 60 mB) about 120 mC) about 180 mD) more than 200 mAnswer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 16: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

16) In each second of fall, the distance a freely falling object will fall is

A) about 5 m.B) about 10 m.C) the same, but not 5 m or 10 m.D) increasing.E) none of theseAnswer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 17: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

17) A car accelerates at 2 meters/s/s. Assuming the car starts from rest, how far will it travel in 10 s?

A) 2 mB) 10 mC) 40 mD) 100 mE) 200 mAnswer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 18: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

18) Drop a rock from a 5-m height and it accelerates at 10 m/s2 and strikes the ground 1 s later. Drop the same rock from a height of 2.5 m and its acceleration of fall is about

A) half as much.B) the same amount.C) twice as much.D) four times as much.Answer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 19: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

19) A ball tossed vertically upward rises, reaches its highest point, and then falls back to its starting point. During this time the acceleration of the ball is always

A) in the direction of motion.B) opposite its velocity.C) directed upward.D) directed downward.Answer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 20: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

20) While a car travels around a circular track at a constant speed, its

A) acceleration is zero.B) velocity is zero.C) inertia is zero.D) none of the aboveAnswer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 21: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

21) If a car accelerates from rest at 2 meters per second per second, its speed 3 seconds later will be about

A) 2 m/s.B) 3 m/s.C) 4 m/s.D) 6 m/s.Answer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 22: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

22) A ball is thrown upwards and returns to the same position. Compared with its original speed after release, its speed when it returns is about

A) half as much.B) the same.C) twice as much.D) four times as much.Answer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 23: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

23) An object covers a distance of 8 meters in the first second of travel, another 8 meters during the next second, and 8 meters again during the third second. Its acceleration in meters per second per second is approximately

A) 0.B) 5.C) 8.D) 24.Answer: A

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 24: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

24) At one instant an object in free fall is moving downward at 50 meters per second. One second later its speed should be about

A) 25 m/s.B) 50 m/s.C) 55 m/s.D) 60 m/s.E) 100 m/s.Answer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 25: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

25) At one instant a heavy object in air is moving upward at 50 meters per second. One second later its speed is approximately

A) 40 m/s.B) 50 m/s.C) 55 m/s.D) 60 m/s.Answer: A

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 26: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

26) Disregarding air resistance, objects fall with constant

A) velocity.B) speed.C) acceleration.D) distances each successive second.Answer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 27: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

27) A ball is thrown upwards and caught when it comes back down. In the presence of air resistance, the speed with which it is caught is always

A) more than the speed it had when thrown upwards.

B) less than the speed it had when thrown upwards.

C) the same as the speed it had when thrown upwards.

D) impossible to determine.Answer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 28: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

28) Starting from rest, the distance a freely falling object will fall in 0.5 second is about

A) 1 m.B) 10 m.C) 1.00 m.D) none of the aboveAnswer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 29: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

29) One half second after starting from rest, a freely falling object will have a speed of about

A) 20 m/s.B) 10 m/s.C) 5 m/s.D) 2.5 m/s.E) none of theseAnswer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 30: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

30) An object falls freely from rest on a planet where the acceleration due to gravity is 20 meters per second squared. After 5 seconds, the object will have a speed of

A) 5 m/s.B) 10 m/s.C) 20 m/s.D) 50 m/s.E) 100 m/s.Answer: E

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 31: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

31) An object falls freely from rest on a planet where the acceleration due to gravity is twice as much as it is on Earth. In the first 5 seconds it falls a distance of

A) 100 m.B) 150 m.C) 250 m.D) 500 m.E) none of theseAnswer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 32: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

32) An apple falls from a tree and hits the ground 5 meters below. It hits the ground with a speed of about

A) 5 m/s.B) 10 m/s.C) 15 m/s.D) 20 m/s.E) not enough information given to estimateAnswer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 33: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

33) It takes 6 seconds for a stone to fall to the bottom of a mine shaft. How deep is the shaft?

A) about 60 mB) about 120 mC) about 180 mD) more than 200 mAnswer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 34: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

34) If you drop an object, it will accelerate downward at a rate of 9.8 meters per second per second. If you instead throw it downwards, its acceleration (in the absence of air resistance) will be

A) less than 9.8 meters per second per second.B) 9.8 meters per second per second.C) greater than 9.8 meters per second per

second.Answer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 35: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

35) In each second of fall, the distance a freely falling object will fall is

A) about 5 m.B) about 10 m.C) the same, but not 5 m or 10 m.D) increasing.E) none of these

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 36: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

36) If a projectile is fired straight up at a speed of 10 m/s, the time it takes to reach the top of its path is about

A) 1 second.B) 2 seconds.C) 10 seconds.D) not enough information to estimateAnswer: A

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 37: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

37) If a projectile is fired straight up at a speed of 10 m/s, the total time to return to its starting position is about

A) 1 second.B) 2 seconds.C) 10 seconds.D) 20 seconds.E) not enough information to estimateAnswer: BAnswer: A

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 38: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

38) Consider drops of water that leak at a steady rate from a dripping faucet. As the drops fall they

A) get closer together.B) get farther apart.C) remain at a relatively fixed distance from

one another.Answer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 39: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

39) Disregarding air drag, how fast must you toss a ball straight up in order for it to take 2 seconds to return to the level from which you tossed it?

A) 5 m/sB) 7.5 m/sC) 10 m/sD) 15 m/sE) 20 m/sAnswer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 40: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

40) A car accelerates at 2 meters per second per second. Assuming the car starts from rest, how much time does it need to accelerate to a speed of 30 m/s?

A) 2 secondsB) 15 secondsC) 30 secondsD) 60 secondsE) none of theseAnswer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 41: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

41) A car accelerates from rest for 5 seconds until it reaches a speed of 20 m/s. What is the car's acceleration in meters per second per second?

A) 1B) 2C) 3D) 4E) 5Answer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 42: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

42) Ten seconds after starting from rest, a car is moving at 40 m/s. What is the car's acceleration in meters per second per second?

A) 0.25B) 2.8C) 4.0D) 10E) 40Answer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 43: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

43) When a rock thrown straight upwards gets to the exact top of its path, its

A) velocity is zero and its acceleration is zero.B) velocity is zero and its acceleration is about

10 meters per second per second.C) velocity is about 10 m/s and its acceleration

is zero.D) velocity is about 10 m/s and its acceleration

is about 10 meters per second per second.E) none of theseAnswer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 44: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

44) A bullet is dropped from the top of the Empire State Building while another bullet is fired downward from the same location. Neglecting air resistance, the acceleration of

A) the fired bullet is greater.B) the dropped bullet is greater.C) each bullet is 9.8 meters per second per

second.Answer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 45: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

45) The muzzle velocity of a bullet fired from a new rifle is 100 m/s. Neglecting air resistance, at the end of one second a bullet fired straight up into the air will have traveled a distance of

A) (100 - 4.9) m.B) (100 + 4.9) m.C) 100 m.D) 4.9 m.E) none of theseAnswer: A

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 46: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

46) A bullet is fired straight down from the top of a high cliff. Neglecting air resistance, the acceleration of the bullet in meters per second per second

A) is less than 9.8.B) is 9.8.C) is more than 9.8.D) depends on the height of the cliff.Answer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 47: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

47) A bullet is dropped into a river from a very high bridge. At the same time, another bullet is fired from a gun, straight down towards the water. Neglecting air resistance, the acceleration just before striking the water

A) is greater for the dropped bullet.B) is greater for the fired bullet.C) is the same for each bullet.D) depends on how high they started.E) none of theseAnswer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 48: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

48) Someone standing at the edge of a cliff throws one ball straight up and another ball straight down at the same initial speed. Neglecting air resistance, the ball to hit the ground below the cliff with the greater speed will be

A) the one thrown upward.B) the one thrown downward.C) neither -- they will both hit with the same

speed.Answer: C

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 49: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

49) A ball is thrown upwards. Neglecting air resistance, what initial upward speed does the ball need to remain in the air for a total time of 10 seconds?

A) about 50 m/sB) about 60 m/sC) about 80 m/sD) about 100 m/sE) about 110 m/sAnswer: A

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 50: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

50) A ball is thrown 125 meters upward and then falls the same distance back to Earth. Neglecting air resistance, its total time in the air is

A) about 5 seconds.B) about 10 seconds.C) about 15 seconds.D) more than 20 seconds.Answer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 51: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

51) A pot falls from a ledge and hits the ground 45 m below. The speed with which it hits the ground is

A) about 30 m/s.B) about 60 m/s.C) about 120 m/s.D) more than 120 m/s.Answer: A

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 52: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

53) A man leans over the edge of a cliff and throws a rock upward at 4.9 m/s. Neglecting air resistance, one second later the rock's speed is

A) zero.B) 4.9 m/s.C) 9.8 m/s.D) 14.7 m/s.E) none of the aboveAnswer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 53: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

54) A man leans over the edge of a cliff and throws a rock upward at 4.9 m/s. Neglecting air resistance, two seconds later the rock's speed is

A) zero.B) 4.9 m/s.C) 9.8 m/s.D) 14.7 m/s.E) none of the aboveAnswer: D

3.1 Questions About Motion

Page 54: The two measurements necessary for calculating average speed are A) acceleration and time.

55) A man leans over the edge of a cliff and throws a rock upward at 4.9 m/s. How far below the level from which it was thrown is the rock 2 seconds later?

A) 4.9 mB) 9.8 mC) 14.7 mD) 19.6 mAnswer: B

3.1 Questions About Motion


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